Tina Fey turned down an offer to host this year’s Tony Awards, and now Broadway’s scrambling to find a ringmaster in time for the June 11 telecast.

Fey, who’s working on a musical adaptation of her movie “Mean Girls,” considered the gig, sources say, but couldn’t work out scheduling conflicts.

“I thought we were pretty close,” says a Tony source. “She kept us dangling. Now we’re up against it.”

Sources in Fey’s camp say she made it clear she was unavailable back in February.

The usual suspects can’t make it either. James Corden, who won raves as last year’s host, told CBS a while ago he wasn’t up for an encore. Hugh Jackman, another Tony favorite, is busy shooting the P.T. Barnum movie “The Greatest Showman.” Neil Patrick Harris, now on Netflix in “A Series of Unfortunate Events,” also passed.

“Hamilton” creator Lin-Manuel Miranda was also high on the list, but he’s in London filming the new “Mary Poppins” movie. Expect him to host, however, in 2018.

Fey would have been the perfect fit for the way this year’s Tonys are being configured.

Jackman and Harris, both great song-and-dance men, always kicked off their telecasts with a splashy number and peppered the rest of the show with singing and dancing.

Cordon notched it up last year with a hilarious opening, popping up as characters from “Les Misérables,” “Sweeney Todd,” “Evita,” “Gypsy” and “A Chorus Line.”

Fey can hold a stage without a lot of bells, whistles and sequins, as she proved at the Golden Globes.

As an added bonus, she probably would have written much of the show, lacing it with showbiz zingers.

It would have been smart politics, too: If “Mean Girls” turns out to be a hit, Tony nominators and voters would return the favor by supporting it next year.

Now the search is on for someone else.

Tony officials might see if “La La Land” producer Marc Platt can corral Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone. Not only can they sing and dance, but they’d certainly draw viewers.

Or perhaps Glenn Close and Jake Gyllenhaal can team up. They’re giving brilliant performances in “Sunset Boulevard” and “Sunday in the Park With George,” respectively, although neither is this year eligible for a Tony.

They’d certainly be classy hosts, but I’m not sure how they’d do in the Sparkling Sense of Humor Department.

“I think the proceedings might be a little morose,” a producer says.

There’s some talk that the telecast might draw Hillary Clinton, who’s at the theater all the time these days, but nobody thinks she’s going to carry the show: She might alienate the two or three musical theater fans who voted for Donald Trump.

John Mulaney and Nick Kroll, who both starred in “Oh, Hello,” would be funny, especially with an assist from their friend Stephen Colbert, who might boost ratings.

The Tonys have gone hostless before — with dire results. Theater people still wince at the memory of the 1999 awards, when a bunch of actors stood in a circle and declaimed famous lines from plays.

If you have an idea for a host, send it my way and I’ll pass it along. The clock is ticking, and the Tony people need all the help they can get.